Physical therapy lobbies for direct access

Life in Balance President Alex Markovich would like to see Michigan enact direct access to physical therapy, which 47 states already have, he told state Sen. John Proos Monday.

Life in Balance Physical Therapy President Alex Markovich Monday morning coached state Sen. John Proos in Pilates. Life in Balance, 20 North Second Street, has been in Niles for 12 years and added locations in Mishawaka and South Bend.

“There would be so many opportunities to save money through prevention and serve our community where our hands are tied,” Markovich said. “Even a massage therapist with a six-month certificate can see people off the street and I can’t with a master’s degree. I wanted to make you aware of the financial burden lack of direct access puts. We have to have a doctor referral.”

Patients are seen for 80 minutes at an initial evaluation, then 40 minutes at every session after that.

“Physical therapy winds up saving money,” Markovich said.

Without direct access, someone with lower back pain sees a doctor, which might take a week to arrange for an eight-minute exam, resulting in a prescription for medication.

There might be another appointment or two for tests.

“Weeks go by without any relief,” Markovich said, “and now it’s a chronic issue when they start physical therapy. Why don’t we do physical therapy first? Because there’s a perceived threat of this up-and-coming, evolving field getting into an arena of new territory. You’ve got to look at what’s best for the customer and who’s paying the bills. There are no studies showing direct access increases health industry costs or malpractice in states that have it. We are trained to assess the musculoskeletal system but need to be empowered.”

Proos, R-St. Joseph, asked how the Supreme Court imminent decision on the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, would impact Life in Balance.

“Something needs to be done, obviously,” Markovich said. “It’s a tragedy when people live in fear for their health care benefits. But the way this bill was pushed through with the economy the way it is scares me. The government can’t even pay its light bill. I don’t buy the savings. It seems short-sighted and very politically driven by the president. I don’t think it’s constitutional to require someone to buy (health insurance). However, Medicare and the commercial insurance industry are making positive changes in prevention and incentivizing quality of care.”

“Reimbursement based on results and quality is the way to go,” he said. “I’d like to create a system which reduces cost first before we add to the system and make it harder to manage. The public is fed up and paying attention.”

“The best way to save money is to never spend it in the first place,” Proos said.

Dowagiac

Two hospitalized after two-vehicle Howard Township crash

Community News

Rotary president named Paul Harris Fellow

Berrien County

New public administrator appointed in Berrien County

Community News

Niles teen delivers 300+ tree saplings on Earth Day

Local Government

Niles City Council approves Memorial Day Parade

Community News

City council talks PrideFest, approves housing grant

Community News

Dowagiac Middle School to host inaugural Mother’s Day Market, Craft Fair Saturday

Brandywine Education

Michigan Supreme Court hears case at SMC

Community News

Dowagiac first responders, school staff honored for life-saving actions

Community News

2024 Dowagiac Music in The Park lineup, vendors announced

Business

YMCA to open downtown South Bend location

Buchanan

Buchanan City Commission honors retiring public safety director

Letters to the Editor

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Vote ‘yes’ for Brandywine May 7

Dowagiac

SMC, Grand Valley Omni partner to offer Bachelor’s degree options

Buchanan

Group submits signatures to force recall election of Buchanan mayor

Letters to the Editor

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Vote ‘yes’ May 7 for Brandywine Community Schools

Crime/Court

Niles man gets prison time for shooting man in neck

Berrien County

Fernwood Botanical Garden executive director announces retirement

Business

Cassopolis Beer Company to bring brews, pizza to historic building

Cass County

Cass County residents sentenced on drug charges

Community News

Niles student organizes community clean-up day

Community News

Cass County entities collaborate with EGLE to demolish unsafe building in Edwardsburg

Letters to the Editor

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive

Cass County

Undersheriff Roach announces run for Cass County Sheriff